177 Mo. App. 95 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
An employee of defendant was •driving an oil spreader along one of defendant’s
Plaintiff drove into town and entered the street which was being oiled, and drove his team, hitched to a buggy, east along the north side of the street. The oil spreader was being driven west and as the two vehicles approached each other plaintiff’s, team became frightened at the spreader and this fright was plainly manifest to the driver of the oil wagon. Plaintiff called to the driver and asked him to stop, but the latter, although in plain view and hearing distance and able to see and understand the situation, did not accede to the request but kept on approaching and the frightened horses became still more frightened, and, in their frantic efforts to get away, either threw or pulled plaintiff out of the buggy and then ran away demolishing the buggy and breaking the leg of one of the horses.
The negligence charged does not consist in the unusual nature, character, or size of the oil spreader, nor in the use of an instrument inherently likely to frighten horses, but in negligently failing to stop, when requested, and after the oil driver saw and knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have seen
We have carefully read the entire evidence and think there was. undoubtedly substantial evidence tending to show that this negligent failure to stop, after plaintiff’s situation and predicament became apparent, caused the runaway and brought about the damage sued for. It is true there is evidence to the contrary, but the conflict in the testimony was for the jury to settle, and they have done so in plaintiff’s favor, having returned a verdict for him in the sum of $350. [Darlington Lumber Co. v. Building Co., 134 Mo. App. 316; Culbertson v. Hill, 84 Mo. 553.] The evidence tending to show that the spreader and the unusual ismell of the oil were likely to scare horses bears on the question of what did scare the horses, and also throws light on the question whether the driver of the oil wagon was under any obligation to stop when he saw the situation. The tests of a defendant’s, liability, when charged with negligence in a case like this, are whether or not the given results arise as the consequences of the act complained of and whether or not the consequences were such as, under the circumstances, might and ought to have been foreseen by defendant in time to have avoided them by the exercise of ordinary care. [Paden v. Van Blarcom, 181 Mo. 117.] When these tests are answered in the affirmative the defendant’s liability appears., and where there is substantial evidence to support them, the answer must come from the jury.
As to plaintiff’s assuming the risk by entering upon a street closed to traffic, the evidence shows that only the north half of it was closed or had a sign to that effect while the south half was purposely left open for travel. And plaintiff did not assume the risk of the oil driver’s, negligence in continuing on his way
Under the authority last cited and others, the petition stated a cause of action, and defendant’s demurrer was properly overruled. Moreover, defendant by answering over waived any defect save the defect of stating no cause of action whatever. [Wyler v. Ratican, 150 Mo. App. 474.] If the petition in this case stands in need of any reasonable intendments in its favor, it is rightfully entitled to them after verdict and judgment, since it notified defendant with reasonable certainty of the character of the action and the issues it was called upon to meet.
The remark of the trial court, of which complaint is made, while neither polite nor complimentary to the attorney trying the case, was not reversible error since it did not in the remotest degree bear upon anything which would influence the case. Impatience and acerbity from the bench frequently wound the feelings cruelly and are, therefore, hard to bear. They do not assist, but hinder, the proper performance of the. difficult, exacting, and frequently delicate duties of a judge. But if one can fully realize the multitude of cares, perplexities and responsibilities that beset and harass a trial judge, he is willing to at least indulge in the habit of kindly judgment, even, if an impatient or unkind remark does now and then escape from the usually patient and, kindly disposed individual on the woolsack.
The instructions are not open to the objections made to them. They are fully authorized by the decision of the Supreme Court in the Phelan case above cited. Neither do they predicate plaintiff’s right to recover upon a cause of action not stated in the pleadings or outside the evidence. The affirmance of this case in no way tends to establish the rule that the city cannot use on its streets an instrument likely to
The judgment is affirmed.